activities and experiences that put the
heart
in Wholehearted living, we
can see how people define the concepts that drive their actions, beliefs,
and emotions.
For example, when the research participants talked about a concept
such as
love,
I was careful to define it as they experienced it. Sometimes
that required developing new definitions (like I actually did with
love
and many other words).
Other times, when I started looking around in
the existing literature, I found definitions that captured the spirit of the
participants’ experiences. A good example of this is
play.
Play is an
essential component
to Wholehearted living, and when I researched the
topic, I discovered the amazing work of Dr. Stuart Brown.
1
So, rather
than creating a new definition, I reference his work because it accurately
reflects what I learned in the research.
I realize that definitions spark controversy and disagreement, but
I’m okay with that. I’d rather we debate the
meaning of words that are
important to us than not discuss them at all. We need common language
to help us create awareness and understanding, which is essential to
Wholehearted living.
Digging Deep
In early 2008, when my blog was still pretty new,
I wrote a post about
breaking my “dig-deep” button. You know the dig-deep button, right?
It’s the button that you rely on when you’re too bone-tired to get up one
more time in the middle of the night or to do one more load of throw-
up-diarrhea laundry or to catch one more plane or to return one more
call or to please/perform/perfect the way you normally do even when
you just want to flip someone off and hide under the covers.
The dig-deep button is a secret level of pushing through when we’re
exhausted
and overwhelmed, and when there’s too much to do and too
little time for self-care.
In my blog post, I explained how I had decided not to fix my dig-
deep button. I made a promise to myself that when I felt emotionally,
physically,
and spiritually done, I’d try slowing down rather than relying
on my old standbys: pushing through, soldiering on, and sucking it up.
•
3
•
INTRODUCTION: WHOLEHEARTED LIVING
It
worked for a while, but I missed my button. I missed having some-
thing to turn to when I was depleted and down. I needed a tool to help
me dig my way out. So, I turned back to my research to see if I could
find a way to dig that was more consistent with Wholehearted living.
Maybe there was something better than just sucking it up.
Here’s what I found: Men and women who live Wholeheartedly
do indeed DIG Deep. They just do it in a different way. When they’re
exhausted and overwhelmed, they get
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: